Media
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‘Reparations’ Issue Best-Seller for the Atlantic
In Appearance, Coates Also Makes a Case for Journalism “The Case for Reparations,” Ta-Nehisi Coates’ brief in the Atlantic for why African Americans are owed a debt for the racial penalties paid for since slavery, “has brought more visitors to the Atlantic [website] in a single day than any single piece we’ve ever published,” Atlantic…
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Heart & Soul Magazine Still Owes Writers Thousands
After a Year, Only Half of Promised Settlement Paid More than a year after the National Writers Union and representatives of Heart & Soul magazine agreed that a dozen freelance writers and editors would collect more than $125,000 in unpaid fees, the health and wellness magazine has paid only about half of what it promised,…
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Last Editor to Work With John H. Johnson Leaves Ebony Magazine
Historic Week for Company With Jet’s Last Print Edition The end of the print edition of Jet magazine this week is only one piece of history taking place at the parent Johnson Publishing Co. In assembling a new team for Ebony magazine, of which she is now editor, former Jet editor Mitzi Miller is proceeding…
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Deal Could Almost Double Number of Black-Owned Television Stations
Nexstar Offers to Sell 3 Fox Outlets to Entreprener Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc., said Friday that it had agreed to sell three television stations to black media entrepreneur Pluria Marshall Jr. in a deal that, if approved, would nearly double the tiny number of full-powered African American-owned commercial television stations. The deal would require a…
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Nextstar Deal Could Almost Double Number of Black-Owned Television Stations
Nexstar Offers to Sell 3 Fox Outlets to Entrepreneur Nexstar Broadcasting Group, Inc., said Friday that it had agreed to sell three television stations to black media entrepreneur Pluria Marshall Jr. in a deal that, if approved, would nearly double the tiny number of full-powered African American-owned commercial television stations. The deal would require a…
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The Bravest Girl You’ll Ever Meet
“The Bravest Girl You’ll Ever Meet” Story Tells of Polio Victim Left for 10 Days in Forest An Associated Press story about “The bravest girl you’ll ever meet,” in the words of a tweet Monday from the reporter, is winning kudos for its emotional power and its journalism. The story tells of a 10-year-old girl…
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Colorful Publisher Raymond Boone Dies at 76
Richmond, Va., Journalist Insisted on High Standards Raymond H. Boone Sr., the colorful, principled and feisty founder, editor and publisher of the weekly Richmond (Va.) Free Press, died Tuesday at his Richmond home after battling pancreatic cancer, his wife, Jean Boone, told Journal-isms. He was 76. Boone was on the job until nearly the end,…
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NY Times Editor Acknowledges Debt to Black Journalists
“I Identify with People Who Don’t Have Much Power” Dean Baquet, the first African American top editor at the New York Times, does not talk much publicly about race, but he says that he owes his job to the black journalists who came before him and that his own background makes him “want to make…
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That Time Maya Angelou Worked as a Journalist in Egypt
In 1960, Renaissance Woman Landed Editor’s Job in Egypt Maya Angelou, the Renaissance woman who assumed roles ranging from poet to calypso singer, for a brief time was also a journalist. Angelou, who died at 86 Wednesday at her home in Winston-Salem, N.C., had her baptism of fire in journalism in 1960. As Angelou explained…
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Mark Cuban’s Remarks on Race Made for Good TV
Mark Cuban Remarks Prove Fodder for TV Food Fights “Two CNN panelists really went at each other on Friday night over Mark Cuban‘s comments about prejudice,” Josh Feldman wrote for Mediaite, referring to the tech millionaire and owner of the Dallas Mavericks. “Author Tim Wise duked it out with conservative commentator Crystal Wright over exactly what the crime rate is in the black…